I Confess: Revelations in Exile

$32.95

Kooshyar Karimi

This is a gripping, previously untold story, which throws a chill light on the secrets and lies that flourish in the fertile soil of dehumanising beliefs and practices – in this case in the Islamic Republic of Iran. This is a memoir by Sydney-based doctor and writer/translator, Kooshyar Karimi, who in 2000 managed to flee, with his family, escaping certain torture and death which stalked him on a daily basis in his native Iran. Karimi’s sin was his Jewishness and the fact that he helped desperate girls and women, who had been raped, terminate the resulting pregnancies.

Kooshyar Karimi is a father, a doctor, a writer, and translator. In 1998, he is kidnapped from the streets, blindfolded, and tortured. When he is eventually released, it is only as a spy for the Islamic Secret Service. This is the story of his survival.

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  • 2012 | 9780987178503 | 375 pages | Paperback | 230 x 145 mm | Memoir

  • memoir, Kooshyar Karimi, I Confess, revelations, exile, Iran, Jewish, Turkey, flee, refugee, refugee stories, displaced people

This is a gripping, previously untold story, which throws a chill light on the secrets and lies that flourish in the fertile soil of dehumanising beliefs and practices – in this case in the Islamic Republic of Iran. This is a memoir by Sydney-based doctor and writer/translator, Kooshyar Karimi, who in 2000 managed to flee, with his family, escaping certain torture and death which stalked him on a daily basis in his native Iran.

His story has the captivating yet disturbing quality of a tragic fable… A gifted storyteller for whom writing has become an act of atonement, Karimi skilfully captures both the everyday and the epic dimensions of his extraordinary life.
— Fiona Capp, Pick of the Week, The Age, 8th Sept 2012
Image of author Kooshyar Karimi

Kooshyar Karimi is a father, a doctor, a writer, and translator. In 1998, he was kidnapped off the streets of Tehran, blindfolded, and tortured. When he was eventually released, it was on condition that he spy for the Islamic Secret Service or be executed. He eventually fled Iran and now lives in NSW, working in General Practice and writing in his spare time. Read more.